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When acoustic waves propagate through a volume of vortical flows, the strong nonlinear scattering lead the amplitude, the frequency, and the phase of the incident waves to change obviously. As one of the most significant problems in the area of aeroacoustics, the scattering of acoustic waves by a vortical flow plays a main role in industrial applications and scientific research. In this study, we start from an elementary vortex model. The scattering of plane acoustic waves from a Taylor vortex is investigated by solving two-dimensional Euler equations numerically in the time domain. To resolve the small-amplitude acoustic waves, a sixth-order-accurate compact Padé scheme is used for spatial derivatives and a fourth-order-accurate Runge-Kutta scheme is used to advance the solution in time. To minimize the reflection of outgoing waves, a buffer zone is used at the computational boundary. The computations of scattered fields with very small amplitudes are found to be in excellent agreement with a benchmark provided by previous studies. Simulations for the scattering from a Taylor vortex reveal that the amplitude of the scattered fields is strongly influenced by two dimensionless quantities: the vortex strength
${M_v}$ and the length-scale ratio$\lambda /R$ . Based on a global analysis of scale effects of these two dimensionless quantities on the scattering cross-section, the whole scattering domain defined on the${M_v} - \lambda /R$ plane is divided into three subdomains. As the vortex strength${M_v}$ increases and the length-scale ratio$\lambda /R$ decreases, the acoustic scattering from a compact vortex goes through the long-wavelength domain, the resonance domain, and the geometrical acoustics domain in turn. The associated scattered fields with the increasing of intensity show more irregularities. The scattering in the long-wavelength domain possesses four primary beams described by half-sine functions, which scales as${M_v}{\left( {\lambda /R} \right)^{ - 2}}$ . In particular, the directivity of the scattered field with a very low Mach number and a very long wavelength behaves as${M_v}{\left( {\lambda /R} \right)^{ - 2}}\left| {\sin \left( {\theta /2} \right)} \right|$ . In the resonance domain, the beams in the opposite direction to the incident waves decay rapidly. The rest of two beams follow the${M_v}$ scaling. The scattered fields are concentrated around the direction of the incident wave in the geometrical acoustics domain, where the primary beams are surrounded by several small sub-beams. The physical mechanism of the acoustic scattering caused by a vortex involves two different mechanisms, namely nonlinear scattering effect and linear long-range refraction effect.-
Keywords:
- acoustic scattering /
- vortex strength /
- length-scale ratio /
- scaling laws
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[2] Lund F, Rojas C 1989 Physica D 37 508Google Scholar
[3] 武从海, 马瑞轩, 王益民, 张树海 2020 空气动力学学报 38 1120
Wu C, Ma R, Wang Y, Zhang S 2020 Acta Aerodyn. Sin. 38 1120
[4] 李秀坤, 孟祥夏, 夏峙 2015 64 064302Google Scholar
Li X K, Meng X X, Xia Z 2015 Acta Phys. Sin. 64 064302Google Scholar
[5] 夏峙, 李秀坤 2015 64 094302Google Scholar
Xia Z, Li X K 2015 Acta Phys. Sin. 64 094302Google Scholar
[6] 杨阳, 李秀坤 2016 65 164301Google Scholar
Yang Y, Li X K 2016 Acta Phys. Sin. 65 164301Google Scholar
[7] Labbe R, Pinton J F 1998 Phys. Rev. Lett. 81 1413Google Scholar
[8] Oljaca M, Gu X, Glezer A, Baffico M, Lund F 1998 Phys. Fluids 10 886Google Scholar
[9] Powell A 1964 J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 36 177Google Scholar
[10] Kraichnan R H 1953 J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 25 1096Google Scholar
[11] Lighthill M J 1953 Proc. Cambridge Philos. Soc. 49 531Google Scholar
[12] Amiet R K 1978 J. Sound Vib. 58 467Google Scholar
[13] Obukhov A M 1941 Dokl. Akad. Nauk SSSR 30 616
[14] Howe M S 1973 J. Sound Vib. 27 455Google Scholar
[15] Clifford S F, Brown E H 1974 J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 55 929Google Scholar
[16] Ostashev V E, Salomons E M, Clifford S F, Lataitis R J, Wilson D K, Blanc-Benon P, Juva D 2001 J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 109 1894Google Scholar
[17] Dallois L, Blanc-Benon P, Juvé D 2001 J. Comput. Acoust. 9 477Google Scholar
[18] Fetter A L 1964 Phys. Rev. A 136 1488Google Scholar
[19] Oshea S 1975 J. Sound Vib. 43 109Google Scholar
[20] Colonius T, LELE S, Moin P 1991 29 th Aerospace Sciences Meeting Reno, United States, January 7–10, 1991 p494
[21] Colonius T, Lele S K, Moin P 1994 J. Fluid Mech. 260 271Google Scholar
[22] Ford R, Smith S G L 1999 J. Fluid Mech. 386 305Google Scholar
[23] Llewellyn Smith S G, Ford R 2001 Phys. Fluids 13 2876Google Scholar
[24] Llewellyn Smith S G, Ford R 2001 Phys. Fluids 13 2890Google Scholar
[25] Hattori Y, Llewellyn Smith S G 2002 J. Fluid Mech. 473 275Google Scholar
[26] Howe M S 1999 J. Sound Vib. 227 1003Google Scholar
[27] Kopiev V F, Belyaev I V 2010 J. Sound Vib. 329 1409Google Scholar
[28] Candel S M 1979 J. Fluid Mech. 90 465Google Scholar
[29] Clair V, Gabard G 2018 J. Fluid Mech. 841 50Google Scholar
[30] Bodony D J 2006 J. Comput. Phys. 212 681Google Scholar
[31] Mani A 2012 J. Comput. Phys. 231 704Google Scholar
[32] Ke G, Li W, Zheng Z C 2015 21st AIAA/CEAS Aeroacoustics Conference Dallas, United States, June 22–26, 2015 p3267
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[1] Ferziger J H 1974 J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 56 1705Google Scholar
[2] Lund F, Rojas C 1989 Physica D 37 508Google Scholar
[3] 武从海, 马瑞轩, 王益民, 张树海 2020 空气动力学学报 38 1120
Wu C, Ma R, Wang Y, Zhang S 2020 Acta Aerodyn. Sin. 38 1120
[4] 李秀坤, 孟祥夏, 夏峙 2015 64 064302Google Scholar
Li X K, Meng X X, Xia Z 2015 Acta Phys. Sin. 64 064302Google Scholar
[5] 夏峙, 李秀坤 2015 64 094302Google Scholar
Xia Z, Li X K 2015 Acta Phys. Sin. 64 094302Google Scholar
[6] 杨阳, 李秀坤 2016 65 164301Google Scholar
Yang Y, Li X K 2016 Acta Phys. Sin. 65 164301Google Scholar
[7] Labbe R, Pinton J F 1998 Phys. Rev. Lett. 81 1413Google Scholar
[8] Oljaca M, Gu X, Glezer A, Baffico M, Lund F 1998 Phys. Fluids 10 886Google Scholar
[9] Powell A 1964 J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 36 177Google Scholar
[10] Kraichnan R H 1953 J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 25 1096Google Scholar
[11] Lighthill M J 1953 Proc. Cambridge Philos. Soc. 49 531Google Scholar
[12] Amiet R K 1978 J. Sound Vib. 58 467Google Scholar
[13] Obukhov A M 1941 Dokl. Akad. Nauk SSSR 30 616
[14] Howe M S 1973 J. Sound Vib. 27 455Google Scholar
[15] Clifford S F, Brown E H 1974 J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 55 929Google Scholar
[16] Ostashev V E, Salomons E M, Clifford S F, Lataitis R J, Wilson D K, Blanc-Benon P, Juva D 2001 J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 109 1894Google Scholar
[17] Dallois L, Blanc-Benon P, Juvé D 2001 J. Comput. Acoust. 9 477Google Scholar
[18] Fetter A L 1964 Phys. Rev. A 136 1488Google Scholar
[19] Oshea S 1975 J. Sound Vib. 43 109Google Scholar
[20] Colonius T, LELE S, Moin P 1991 29 th Aerospace Sciences Meeting Reno, United States, January 7–10, 1991 p494
[21] Colonius T, Lele S K, Moin P 1994 J. Fluid Mech. 260 271Google Scholar
[22] Ford R, Smith S G L 1999 J. Fluid Mech. 386 305Google Scholar
[23] Llewellyn Smith S G, Ford R 2001 Phys. Fluids 13 2876Google Scholar
[24] Llewellyn Smith S G, Ford R 2001 Phys. Fluids 13 2890Google Scholar
[25] Hattori Y, Llewellyn Smith S G 2002 J. Fluid Mech. 473 275Google Scholar
[26] Howe M S 1999 J. Sound Vib. 227 1003Google Scholar
[27] Kopiev V F, Belyaev I V 2010 J. Sound Vib. 329 1409Google Scholar
[28] Candel S M 1979 J. Fluid Mech. 90 465Google Scholar
[29] Clair V, Gabard G 2018 J. Fluid Mech. 841 50Google Scholar
[30] Bodony D J 2006 J. Comput. Phys. 212 681Google Scholar
[31] Mani A 2012 J. Comput. Phys. 231 704Google Scholar
[32] Ke G, Li W, Zheng Z C 2015 21st AIAA/CEAS Aeroacoustics Conference Dallas, United States, June 22–26, 2015 p3267
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